How to Butterfly Fish

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Splitting fish for pan frying or grilling is a great way to serve an almost boneless fish, so it’s easy to eat and pretty on the plate. Here’s how to butterfly fish, step by step. 

Butterflied trout with peas and parsley on a plate.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Butterflying, also known as kiting or splitting fish, is a basic skill you will want to know, especially when dealing with smaller fish such as trout, bass or perch. It keeps the fish whole but largely debones it. The technique is ideal for either quick pan frying or for stuffing the fish, in this case a rainbow trout from the Sierra Nevada.

To start, you need a large cutting board or other work surface, a very sharp fillet knife, a pair of kitchen shears… and a fish.

A rainbow trout and a fillet knife on a cutting board.
Photo by Hank Shaw

Make sure the fish is scaled and gutted first, and be sure to remove the gills.

Start by making sure your knife is sharp. I know I just mentioned this, but it is important. You will mangle your fish if your knife is not sharp.

Butterfly Fish Step by Step

Start by using shears to snip off the fins; leave the tail. You need to remove the dorsal fin so the fish will lay flat after you’ve butterflied it. If you want, slice carefully on either side of the dorsal fin to remove the bones at its base. 

Snipping fins off a trout.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Armed with a sharp knife, remove the anal fin: Like the dorsal fin, it has a set of bones in it you want to remove. Do this by slicing gently on either side of the fin, all the way to the backbone. Tap the tip of your knife against the backbone when you do this. Gently pull out the fin bones.

Slicing around the anal fin to the tail.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Now remove the ribs. Start from the tail end of the fish, and put the tip of your knife against the backbone where the ribs begin. Slice the ribs free. Do this by slicing from the backbone towards the end of the ribs, gently pressing the knife upward against the ribs — this preserves most of the meat on the fish’s flanks. Do this on both sides.

Slicing off the ribs of a fish to butterfly it.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser
Freeing ribs to butterfly fish.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Use the kitchen shears to snip off the ribs close to the backbone.

Removing the ribs off a fish with shears.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Removing the Backbone

Now you need to remove the backbone itself. Start by freeing the ends of the backbone from the fish’s body. Use the kitchen shears to snip the backbone right behind the head and right in front of the tail.

Severing the backbone while splitting fish.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

Use the knife to free the backbone from the meat. Be careful not to slice all the way up to the top of the fish and through the skin. When you get close to the fish’s head you will feel resistance: These are the fish’s pin bones.

(I have lots of recipes for trout and salmon here, for when you are ready to cook your butterflied fish.)

Slicing around the backbone to butterfly fish.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

In trout, herring, sardines and mackerel, these pin bones are small and insignificant. Leave them, as you won’t even notice they are there once you cook the fish. In bass, bluegills, crappies, perch and rock cod, you will want to use needle-nosed pliers or pin bone tweezers to remove them. If you are splitting fish larger than 18 inches or so, you will need to remove pin bones.

Do this on both sides. You will be left with a fish lying flat and the backbone sticking up in the air.

Lifting the backbone out of the fish.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

To remove the backbone, use one hand to anchor the fish where it meets the backbone; I start at the tail end of the fish. Use the other hand to gently pull it straight up. As it comes free, use your fingers to keep the fish flat and to preserve as much meat as you can. Gently work your way up towards the head and the backbone should come free.

You now have a fish perfect for stuffing. I like to sew stuffed fish shut, but toothpicks works just fine.

A finished butterflied fish.
Photo by Holly A. Heyser

If you want to pan fry the fish instead, remove the rest of the backbone near the tail as well as the head so the fish lies perfectly flat. (That’s the photo at the top of this post, and the recipe is for fried trout with peas

It takes a little practice, but once you get the hang of it, you can butterfly fish in about 3 to 5 minutes. Enjoy!

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About Hank Shaw

Hey there. Welcome to Hunter Angler Gardener Cook, the internet’s largest source of recipes and know-how for wild foods. I am a chef, author, and yes, hunter, angler, gardener, forager and cook. Follow me on Instagram and on Facebook.

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